Although no one person "invented" the movies, Thomas Edison—along with his key employee W.K.L. Dickson—can claim credit for refining experimental ideas into patents that controlled the first decade of moviemaking in America.
Blacksmithing Scene, photographed by Dickson in Edison's newly constructed New Jersey studio in late April 1893, was the first film of more than a few feet to be publicly exhibited. On May 9, 1893, following a lecture at the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences, audience members lined up before Edison's viewing machine, dubbed the kinetoscope, to watch this and a second (now lost) film depicting horseshoeing.
As the Brooklyn Daily Eagle reported the next day, "it shows living subjects portrayed in a manner to excite wonderment." Both films employed the newest technology to showcase traditional work—and a break for beer in Blacksmithing Scene. Because the three "blacksmiths" are impersonated by Edison employees, this is not a documentary but the first instance of screen acting. It is also the earliest surviving complete motion picture on film. Remarkably, the format chosen for Blacksmithing Scene—about 35 millimeters wide, with four vertical sprockets per frame—has remained standard, so that new preservation copies of this earliest film can still be screened by modern projectors. ~ National Film Preservation Foundation
Blacksmithing Scene (1893)
Production Company: Edison Mfg. Co. Director: W.K.L. Dickson. Photographer:William Heise. Cast: Charles Kayser, John Ott. Transfer Note: Copied at 24 frames per second from a 35mm print preserved by the Museum of Modern Art. Running Time: 30 seconds.
Terrific.
Brilliant cinema! I laughed, I cried, I learned something.